Two of the main players in the Access HealthSource public corruption case are scheduled to be sentenced next week, while 10 others convicted of public corruption charges won't be scheduled until December, according to federal court records.

U.S. District Judge Frank Montalvo is scheduled to sentence former Access president and CEO Francisco "Frank" Apodaca at 9 a.m. Nov. 5. The company's former spokesman, political consultant Marc Schwartz, is scheduled to be sentenced at the same time on the following day.

The Access investigation is tied to a scheme to obtain contracts worth up to $150 million for Access from El Paso County, the El Paso Independent School District and the Socorro Independent School District.

Both Schwartz and Apodaca, who pleaded guilty to their roles in the scheme, were originally scheduled to be sentenced earlier this year, but both sought postponements based on medical reasons. According to court records, Apodaca continues to receive medical treatment for a brain injury and recently underwent surgery for a hernia, while Schwartz had an angiogram to find out whether he needed heart bypass surgery or insertion of stents in his arteries.

Schwartz also needed an evaluation to determine whether he had throat cancer.

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Federal prosecutors had alleged Schwartz acted as a "middle man" between Apodaca and local elected officials in order to win contracts for Access. Schwartz created "cheat sheets" for those officials to use while recommending the company to other board members or elected officials, and also delivered bribes to several elected officials on behalf of Apodaca, former El Paso County Judge and attorney Luther Jones, and Bob Jones, the former president and CEO of the National Center for Employment of the Disabled and one of the leaders of the Access HealthSource enterprise.

Jones pleaded guilty to public corruption charges in 2011 and is serving a 10-year prison sentence at the La Tuna prison facility in Anthony, Texas.

Court records show that the sentencing dates for 10 others in the city's large-scale public corruption scandal were also postponed until December.

Former city Rep. Raymond Telles, El Paso lobbyist and political consultant Antonio "Tony" Dill, former Bear Stearns representatives Roberto "Bobby" Ruiz and Chris Pak, former El Paso County Judge Anthony Cobos, and local architect Lorenzo Aguilar are all scheduled to be sentenced at 9 a.m. Dec. 3.

And former Socorro mayor and SISD trustee Guillermo "Willie" Gandara Sr. is scheduled to be sentenced at 10 a.m. Dec. 18.

All are free on bond after pleading guilty to various charges in connection with the FBI's public corruption investigation.

Others who were indicted in the Access case in 2010 also pleaded guilty to various charges of fraud or violating the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, known as RICO. They were former SISD trustees Charles "Charlie" Garcia and Raymundo "Ray" Rodriguez; former El Paso County District Clerk Gilbert Sanchez; lawyer David Escobar; former Ysleta Independent School District board trustees Linda Chavez and Milton "Mickey" Duntley; and former city representative and County Commissioner Larry Medina.

Last year, Luther Jones was sentenced to five years in prison in the Access case, and Sanchez was sentenced to two years in prison. In February, Escobar and Duntley each received about three years in prison. Medina was sentenced to a year and four months in prison. Chavez was given five years of probation.

In September, Montalvo sentenced Rodriguez to four months in prison, and Garcia to seven months in prison.